A direct memory access (DMA) circuit (200) includes a read port (202) and a write port (204). The DMA circuit (200) is a multithreaded initiator with “m” threads on the read port (202) and “n” threads on the write port (204). The DMA circuit (200) includes two decoupled read and write contexts...http://www.google.com/patents/US7761617?utm_source=gb-gplus-sharePatent US7761617 - Multi-threaded DMA

A direct memory access (DMA) circuit (200) includes a read port (202) and a write port (204). The DMA circuit (200) is a multithreaded initiator with “m” threads on the read port (202) and “n” threads on the write port (204). The DMA circuit (200) includes two decoupled read and write contexts and schedulers (302, 304) that provide for more efficient buffering and pipelining. The schedulers (302, 304) are mainly arbitrating between channels at a thread boundary. One thread is associated to one DMA service where a service can be a single or burst transaction. The multithreaded DMA transfer allows for concurrent channel transfers.

Images(7)

Claims(20)

1. A direct memory access (DMA) circuit, comprising:

a read port;

a read port scheduler coupled to the read port;

a write port;

a write port scheduler coupled to the write port;

a request port coupled to the read and write port schedulers;

thread circuitry for holding next access addresses, wherein the read port is configured to support “m” threads and the write port is configured to support “n” threads, where each thread is configured to support a single access and a burst access transaction and the read and write ports are configured to work on different data transfers at the same time; and

channel context circuitry interconnected with the read port, write port and thread circuitry for storing channel context, wherein the channel context circuitry is configured to instantiate a plurality of virtual channels in excess of the number of threads, such that a free thread is associated with a selected virtual channel to initiate an access and then released.

2. The DMA circuit as defined in claim 1, wherein the read port scheduler and write port scheduler each arbitrate between the plurality of channels at a thread boundary.

3. The DMA circuit as defined in claim 1, wherein the read port and the write port scheduler each includes a high priority queue for high priority channels and a low priority queue for regular priority channels.

4. The DMA circuit as defined in claim 1, further comprising:

a memory coupled to the read and write ports; and

a configuration port coupled to the memory for receiving configuration information for configuring the DMA circuit.

5. The DMA circuit as defined in claim 2, wherein the context circuitry further comprises:

a channel context memory shared between the channels.

6. The DMA circuit as defined in claim 1, further comprising:

a read port response manager coupled to the read port; and

a write port response manager coupled to the write port.

7. The DMA circuit as defined in claim 6, wherein the read response manager is configured to identify the channel that owns particular data.

8. The DMA circuit as defined in claim 1, further comprising:

a first-in-first-out (FIFO) memory coupled to the read and write ports.

an address alignment control coupled to the FIFO memory, the address alignment control allows for any source byte on any read port byte lane to be transferred to any write port byte lane.

11. The DMA circuit as defined in claim 10, further comprising an endianness conversion circuit coupled to the read port.

12. A multithreading direct memory access (DMA) circuit comprising:

a write port;

a read port;

a number of address circuits coupled to the read port and to the write port for holding addresses of a plurality of requests;

a context memory coupled to both the read and write ports for holding contexts of logical channels; and

a means coupled to the context memory for mapping requests to the address circuitry and to the logical channels, wherein the means is configured to instantiate a plurality of logical channels in excess of the number of address circuits.

13. The multithreading DMA circuit as defined in claim 12, wherein the means for mapping requests and logical channels is programmable.

14. The multithreading DMA circuit as defined in claim 12, wherein the read and write ports configured to work on different data transfers at the same time.

15. The multithreading DMA circuit as defined in claim 12, further comprising:

a read scheduler coupled to the read port; and

a write scheduler coupled to the write port, the read and write schedulers are decoupled with respect to each other.

16. The multithreading DMA circuit as defined in claim 15, wherein the read and write schedulers each have a first queue for high priority channels and a second queue for low priority channels.

17. The multithreading DMA circuit as defined in claim 16, wherein the arbitration between the two queues in each of the read and write schedulers is performed according to a parameter providing the number of times the high priority channel grants a port before the low priority channel wins the port.

18. The multithreading DMA circuit as defined in claim 12, wherein the channel context memory is shared by all of the logical channels.

19. The multithreading DMA circuit as defined in claim 18, further comprising a read port response manger coupled to the read port that includes a packing control for adjusting the channel element type to the read port.

instantiating a plurality “v” of virtual channels, wherein each virtual channel identifies a source and destination address for transferring a sequence of data from one storage location to a different storage location;

selecting a subset “s” of the plurality of virtual channels via arbitration, where s is less than v;

mapping the selected virtual channels onto physical thread circuits to form a plurality of requests;

queuing the requests to perform either a single access or a burst access; and

releasing each thread circuit at the completion of the associated request access for use by another selected virtual channel.

Description

This application claims priority under 35 USC §(e)(1) of European Application Number 04292406.8 filed on Oct. 11, 2004.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

This invention relates in general to the field of electronics and more specifically to a multi-threaded Direct Memory Access (DMA).

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

DMA is a technique that allows for hardware in a computer to access system memory independently of the system processor. Because the processor is not involved in the transfer of data, DMA is usually fast. DMA is very useful for example in real-time applications and for making backups. A few illustrative examples of hardware that use DMA circuits include sound cards, hard disk controllers and computer subsystems. Traditional DMA circuits have one or more physical channels where each physical channel is a point-to-point communication link connected from a source to a destination port. Although useful, the point-to-point links make the system inflexible and may limit the performance of the DMA for some applications. A need thus exists in the art for a DMA circuit that can help alleviate some of the problems found in prior art DMA circuits.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The features of the present invention, which are believed to be novel, are set forth with particularity in the appended claims. The invention may best be understood by reference to the following description, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in the several figures of which like reference numerals identify like elements, and in which:

FIG. 1 shows a system level block diagram in accordance with one embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 2 shows a top level block diagram of a DMA in accordance with an embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 3 shows a more detailed block diagram of the DMA shown in FIG. 2.

FIG. 4 shows a diagram highlighting four threads received on the read port of the DMA in accordance with an embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 5 shows a diagram highlighting two threads in the write port of the DMA in accordance with an embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 6 shows a block diagram of a DMA read port scheduler in accordance with an embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 7 shows a block diagram of a DMA write port scheduler in accordance with an embodiment of the invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

Referring now to FIG. 1, there is shown a system level block diagram of an electronic system 100 in accordance with an embodiment of the invention. System 100 includes a Main Processor Unit (MPU) subsystem 106 coupled to an Open Core Protocol (OCP) bus or system interconnect 120. The MPU subsystem 106 can include any one of a number of microprocessors or microcontrollers or similar control circuitry. A Digital Signal Processing (DSP) subsystem 102, a camera subsystem 110, an internal memory 114, an external memory 116 and a peripheral interconnect 118 are also coupled to the OCP bus 120. The peripheral interconnect 118 provides interconnection to any one of a number of peripheral devices such as timers, general purpose input/output (GPIO), etc. The DSP subsystem 102 includes a DSP DMA (dDMA) 104, the camera subsystem 110 includes a camera DMA (cDMA) 112 and a system DMA (sDMA) 108 all in accordance with embodiments of the invention.

The DMA circuits used in the dDMA 104, cDMA 112 and sDMA 108 comprise multipoint-to-multipoint DMA circuits which function as multi-threaded initiators each having four threads (or m threads) on their read port and two threads (or n threads) on their write port. The parameters m and n are preferably fixed by the thread budget allocated by the OCP interconnect for each initiator port. In this particular embodiment of the invention, n=2 and m=4, although these numbers can of course vary based on a given system's particular design requirements. The number of channels and the number of hardware requests can be changed at user configuration time. In one embodiment, the number of channels ≦32 and the number of requests ≦127.

In FIG. 2, there is shown a block diagram of a DMA circuit 200 such as used in the dDMA 104, sDMA 108 and the cDMA 112 shown in FIG. 1 in accordance with an embodiment of the invention. DMA 200 includes a read port 202, a write port 204, a configuration port 208 and a unified data first-in first-out (FIFO) 210. FIFO 210 in FIG. 2 is presented in a logical format and is shown sharing between different channels (Ch0-ChN) 212. The DMA 200 includes two decoupled read and write contexts and schedulers (discussed below). The read port 202 and write port 204 can support up to m threads and n threads respectively, where each thread can perform either a single access or a burst access. A thread is associated to a service and a service can comprise a single or burst transaction. For example, if only one channel is scheduled, only one thread is associated to the channel and up to four bursts can be outstanding. Each burst can for example be 4×32 bits.

Some of the features of the DMA circuit 200 include:

1). General Features: Flexible distributed-DMA fabric, with options fixed at design time, such as channel number and port width, native OCP interface and multithreading capability at both the source and destination.

10). FIFO draining: When a channel is disabled and there is data in the corresponding FIFO, the data is drained onto the write port and transferred to a programmed destination.

11). Buffering disable: In case of source synchronized transfers, buffering can be enabled or disabled by setting a buffering disable bit (DMA4_CCR.buffering_disable) respectively to 0 or 1. When buffering is enabled, data fetched from the source side on a hardware request may not be flushed/transferred completely to the destination side until a subsequent hardware request fetches more data from the source side (to be able to pack/burst to the destination). However, if buffering is disabled, then no packing or bursting across the packet boundary is performed, and the remaining data in the packet is transferred using smaller transactions. For both cases, at the end of the block, subsequent hardware requests to flush the data on the destination side are not required. Whether buffering is disabled or not, both the source and destination are synchronized (e.g., element/frame/packet/block synchronized) during transfer. The last write transaction in the frame or in the block is non-posted write (WRNP) even if the write mode is set to 2 (WLNP). However, there should be a WRNP at the end of the packet (even if write mode=2) only in case of destination synchronization. Whether buffering is disabled or not, the packet interrupt is not generated in the source synchronized case.

Table 1 shown below highlights some generic parameters supported by the DMA circuit 200 in accordance with an embodiment of the invention.

TABLE 1

Generic parameter list

Value

Generic Parameter

Type

range

Description

DMA4_FD

integer

[4:8]

This gives the DMA4 FIFO Depth. DMA FIFO depth = 2FD

entries. Maximum supported is 256 (FD = 8) entries.

Minimum supported is 32 (FD = 5) for 32 bit OCP_WIDTH

and 16 (FD = 4) for 64 bit OCP_WIDTH. Each entry can be

32 bit or 64 bit wide depending on OCP_WIDTH.

DMA_NUM_HWR

integer

[1:127]

This parameter is related to the number of channels and

has to be fixed at design time. Maximum supported is 127

requests.

DMA4_NUM_CH

integer

[1:32]

Fixes the number of channels to be implemented for the

DMA, which depends on the DMA use. Maximum

supported is 32 channels.

DMA4_NUM_CHBITS

integer

[1:5]

This should always be log(DMA4_NUM_CH) to base2.

DMA4_OCP_WIDTH

integer

{32, 64}

32 bits or 64 bits. This also determines the data FIFO

width.

DMA4_OCP_BE_WIDTH

integer

{4, 8}

4 for 32 bit OCP and 8 for 64 bit OCP.

DMA4_OCP_BE_WIDTH

integer

{4, 8}

4 for 32 bit OCP,

8 for 64 bit OCP.

DMA4_GRAPHICS

Integer

{0, 1}

0 for no GRAPHICS Logic,

1 to include GRAPHICS Logic

DMA4_PSA_REQUIRED

Integer

{0, 1}

0 for no PSA,

1 to include PSA

The above mentioned features are not meant to be all inclusive but are just some of the features that can be provided by the DMA circuit 200 (also referred to as DMA4) of the present invention. The flexible nature of the DMA circuit 200 allows for its use in multiple areas of a design such as in a DSP subsystem, as a system DMA and in a camera subsystem as shown in FIG. 1.

In FIG. 3 there is shown a more detailed block diagram of the DMA circuit 200. The DMA circuit 200 includes a read port (DMA4 Read Port) 202 and a write port (DMA4 Write Port) 204. Coupled to the DMA4 read port 202 is a channel requests scheduler (DMA4 Read Port scheduler) 302, an OCP request generator 306 and a read port response manager 308. The read port 202 is either a 32-bit or a 64-bit read-only OCP master interface. Choice between 32 or 64 is made at design time.

The DMA4 read port scheduler 302 is responsible for selecting the next channel to be serviced, and for allocating a thread identifier to be used on the OCP interface (MThreadID field). A channel is granted access to the read port 202 by the arbitration logic, for one OCP service. This can be either an OCP single transaction or an OCP burst transaction (4×32-bit/2×64-bit, 8×32-bit/4×64-bit, 16×32-bit/8×64-bit), in accordance with the channel programming for the DMA source. The channel programming can be modified based on system design requirements.

In one embodiment, a maximum of 4 thread IDs can be allocated in the read side, from 0 to 3 (Th0, Th1, Th2 and Th3). Hence the DMA circuit 200 can have up to 4 outstanding read transactions belonging to up to 4 channels in the system interconnect. For an arbitration cycle to occur, two conditions must be satisfied: (a). there is at least one channel requesting and (b) there is at least one free thread ID available. Upon an arbitration cycle, the scheduler 302 grants the highest priority channel that has an active request, allocates the thread ID, and tags this thread as Busy. The channel read context is restored from the shared channel context memory 316.

The arbitration policy implemented is “First Come First Serviced” (FCFS). On top of this arbitration, channels can be given a high-priority attribute. There are 2 queues, one high priority queue and one low priority queue (not shown in FIG. 3, see FIGS. 6 and 7 for a more detailed view of the schedulers 302 and 304). Any channel that is ready to be scheduled will be put at the end of the queue, either regular (low priority) or high priority depending on a priority bit. Non-synchronized channels will be put in the queue when the software sets the enable bit. Synchronized channels will be put in the queue when the hardware DMA request comes in for them. There can be multiple channels that are ready and need to be put in the same queue at the same cycle, one from the configuration port 208 and multiple DMA requests. In this particular case, only one channel will be put in the queue (one in each queue) according to the following rule in one embodiment of the invention: CHi has a higher priority than CHj if j>i. The others will be processed in subsequent cycles. This rule can of course be modified depending on system design requirements. The arbitration between the two queues can be performed in one illustrative example according to a software parameter that sets the number of times the high priority channel grants the port before the low priority channel wins the port and so on.

The top of each queue can be scheduled in each cycle. A software configurable 8 bits priority counter is used to give weighting to the priority queue. For every N (1 to 256) schedules from the priority queue one will be scheduled from the regular queue. A channel that is scheduled will go to the end of the queue after it finishes its turn on the port. At a given time, a channel cannot be allocated more than one thread ID.

Note that if more than one channel is active, each channel is given a ThreadID for the current service only, not for the whole channel transfer. The current channel number/ThreadID associations are stored, and made available to the read response manager 308. However, if only one channel is active, then one thread ID is allocated during the channel transfer and back to back service (Burst or single) can be done with a maximum of 4 consecutive bursts (e.g., 4×32-bit) without rescheduling the channel at the end of each burst transfer. If non-burst alignment occurs at the beginning of the transfer, then the channel is rescheduled for each smaller access until burst aligned. Also, if the end of the transfer is not burst aligned, the channel is rescheduled for each one of the remaining smaller accesses.

From the restored channel context, the read port logic can generate the next OCP address sent to the OCP interface. An OCP READ request is generated by the OCP request generator 306, and is then issued on the OCP interface. The request can be qualified by sideband signals, some of the sideband signals include:

MThreadID field, based on the scheduler allocation;

MReqSecure attribute, as read from the channel context;

MReqSupervisor attribute, as read from the channel context;

MReqEndianness, as read from the channel context;

MReqDataType, as read from the channel context (element size);

MCmd/SCmdAccept handshaking is performed normally, as required by the OCP protocol.

When receiving an OCP read response, from for example a SThreadID field, the read response manager 308 can identify the channel that owns the data. This data is submitted to the shared-FIFO control logic, and written into the FIFO 314 at the appropriate location. Once the data is written into the FIFO 314, if this is the last data of the channel service (i.e. single data service or last data of a burst service), the threadID becomes free again and its status is updated. The last data of a response is identified by a “SRespLast” qualifier. The context for the channel just serviced is saved back into the shared channel context memory using circuitry 322 which includes four registers, one for each thread and the necessary selection and path set-up circuitry. Thread responses can be interleaved, even within bursts, on the read port 202.

The read port scheduler 302 and the write port scheduler 304 are mainly arbitrating between channels at a thread boundary. One thread is associated to one DMA service, where a service can be a single or burst transaction as mentioned previously.

In one embodiment, each channel context is composed of one read context and one write context, with the read and write contexts being scheduled separately. After a DMA request is received at the DMA request port 206, the associated channel “i” is scheduled. The channel context is loaded, then each time there is an OCP read request, one thread m (0 up to 3) is allocated during the whole read transaction. While there is a free thread, other channels can be scheduled according to the arbitration schema employed. One thread becomes free as soon as the corresponding channel read transaction (e.g., a single transaction, burst transaction of 4×32 or 8×32) is finished. Once a thread becomes free it can be allocated to another channel.

The configuration port 208 operates as a slave port and is not buffered. It enables a host (not shown) to access the entity formed by the DMA circuit 200. The configuration port 208 is used for configuration and access to status registers found in the DMA circuit 200. In one embodiment the configuration port 208 is a synchronous 32-bit data bus that supports 8, 16 and 32-bit aligned data and non-burst accesses. The configuration port 208 can also access memory locations, logical channel context and hardware requests memory locations. All write accesses to any internal register, are handled as non-posted write (WRNP) transactions, even if the OCP command used is WR instead of WRNP. A response is sent back onto the OCP interface, after the write effectively completes. The configuration port 208 can access all the global and channel registers in 8-bit, 16-bit or 32-bit form.

Coupled to the DMA4 write port 204 is a DMA4 write port scheduler 304, an OCP request generator 310 and a response manager 312. The write port 204 is driven from the requests coming from the data FIFO 314. There is no other correlation between channel contexts open on the read port side, and channel contexts open on the write port side. Most of the time, open read channel contexts and simultaneously open write channel contexts are different. The OCP write port is either a 32-bit or a 64-bit write-only OCP master interface, the choice between 32-bit or 64-bit is made at design time, although other designs can have different bit sizes.

The total FIFO 314 budget is fixed at design time by generic parameters FD and “OCP_width” so that the FIFO depth=2FD×OCP_width. There is no per-channel allocation of the DMA buffering budget, a full dynamic buffering model is implemented. The buffering budget, for one channel, is preferably bounded using a programmable threshold specified in a register “DMA4_GCR”.

The write port scheduler 304 is responsible for selecting the next channel to be serviced, and for allocating a thread identifier to be used on the OCP interface (MThreadID field). A channel is granted access to the write port 204 by the arbitration logic, for one OCP service, this can be either an OCP single transaction or an OCP burst transaction (4×32, 8×32, 16×32), in accordance with the channel programming for the DMA destination.

A maximum of 2 thread IDs can be allocated, 0 or 1 (Th0 and Th1 on the write side). Hence DMA circuit 200 can have up to 2 outstanding write transactions belonging to up to 2 channels in the system interconnect in this embodiment using circuitry 320.

For an arbitration cycle to occur, two conditions must be satisfied: (a). There has to be at least one channel requesting; and (b) There is at least one free thread ID available. In an arbitration cycle, the write port scheduler 304 grants the highest priority channel that has an active request, allocates the thread ID, and tags this thread as Busy. The channel write context is restored from the shared channel context memory 316. The arbitration policy implemented is “First Come First Serviced” (FCFS). On top of this arbitration, a few channels can be given a high-priority attribute. In one embodiment, there are two queues, one a high priority queue and the other a low priority queue. Any channel that is ready to be scheduled will be put at the end of the queue, either regular (low priority) or high priority depending on the priority bit. Non-synchronized channels will be put in the queue when the software sets the enable bit. Synchronized channels are put in the queue when the hardware DMA request comes in for them.

There can be multiple channels that are ready and need to be put in the same queue at the same cycle, one from the configuration port 208 and multiple DMA requests. In this case only one channel will be put in the queue (one in each queue) according to the following rule: CHi has a higher priority than CHj if j>i. The others will be processed in subsequent cycles.

If only one channel is active, then one thread ID is allocated during the channel transfer and back to back service (Burst or single) can be done with maximum of 4 consecutive bursts (e.g., each burst can be for example 4×32-bit) without rescheduling the channel at the end of each burst transfer. If non-burst alignment at the beginning of the transfer then the channel is rescheduled for each smaller access till it is burst aligned. Also, if the end of the transfer is not burst aligned, the channel is rescheduled for each one of the remaining smaller accesses.

The top of each queue can be scheduled in each cycle. A software configurable 8 bits priority counter is used to give weighting to the priority queue. For every N (1 to 256) schedules from the priority queue one will be scheduled from regular queue. A channel that is scheduled will go to the end of the queue after it finishes its turn on the port. Note that if more than channel is active, each channel is given a ThreadID for the current service only, not for the whole channel transfer. The current channel number/ThreadID associations are stored, and made available to the write port response manager 312.

From the restored channel context, the write port logic can generate the next OCP address sent to the OCP interface. An OCP WRITE request is then issued by the OCP request generator 310 on the OCP interface, which may be qualified by sideband signals.

The write command used on the OCP interface can be either a posted write (OCP WR command) or a non-posted write (OCP WRNP command): The OCP write interface selects the write command to be used, based on the channel attributes as programmed by the user. There are 3 possibilities:

(1). All channel transactions are mapped on the WRNP (none posted);

(2). All channel transactions are mapped on the WR command (posted); or

(3). All channel transactions are mapped on the WR command, except the last one that is mapped on a WRNP command, so that the end-of-transfer interrupt can be delayed until the write has reached the target.

All DMA4 writes expect a response on the OCP interface. Usually, when issuing a posted write request, the response is provided very quickly by the system interconnect, whereas a non-posted write transaction gets its response later, after the effective write has been completed at the destination target. Handshaking is performed normally, as required by the OCP protocol.

When receiving an OCP write response, from the SThreadID field, the write port response manager 312 can identify the channel that owns the response. Once the data is read from the FIFO 314, if this is the last data of the channel service (i.e. single data service or last data of a burst service), the threadID becomes free again and its status is updated. The context for the channel just serviced is saved back via circuitry 320 into the shared channel context memory 316. If should be noted that thread responses can be interleaved, even within bursts, on the write port 204.

The Configuration port 208 can access all global 318 and channel registers in 8-bit, 16-bit or 32-bit. Four of the registers need a shadow register to be read correctly:

DMA4_CSAC: Channel Source Address Counter

DMA4_CDAC: Channel Destination Address Counter

DMA4_CCEN: Channel Current transferred Element Number

DMA4_CCFN: Channel Current transferred Frame Number

To make implementation easier, only one shadow register is used by the above four registers.

Packing is performed on the read port side 202 when the channel element type is narrower than the read port 202, and if this feature has been enabled by the DMA programmer. The packing feature is enabled if the DMA source is qualified as a non-packed target, and the DMA destination is qualified as a packed target. Packing is not compatible with source burst transactions, only destination burst can be enabled when packing is selected. Each time a channel requiring a packing operation is scheduled on the read port 202, only a partial write is done to the memory buffer on the appropriate byte lanes, with the valid bytes of the current OCP response. Consequently, the data memory must provide byte access granularity during a write operation in the data FIFO 314. The byte enable memory must also be updated accordingly.

No new NextWriteAddress 336 is allocated until the memory word is complete, i.e. when the last byte of the memory word is effectively written. The channel FIFO level is also updated on this event. This update event is triggered based on the current byte address of the read access, with respect to the element type and the transaction endianness. Based on address alignment and total transfer count, the first and last packed-words can be partial. This is reported to the write port side using the byte enable memory 332.

Unpacking is done on the write port side when the channel element type is narrower than the write port 204, and if this feature has been enabled by the DMA programmer. The unpacking feature is enabled if the DMA source is qualified as a packed target, and the DMA destination is qualified as a non-packed target. Unpacking is not compatible with destination burst transactions, only source burst can be enabled when unpacking is selected. When both source and destination targets are packed or unpacked then packing and unpacking operations are disabled.

Each time a channel requiring an unpacking operation is scheduled on the write port 204, a regular word read is performed from the memory buffer, at the address stored in the current NextReadAddress register 320. Only valid bytes are taken into account, and the NextReadAddress register is only updated from the NextReadAddress FIFO 334 when all bytes within a data FIFO word have been read and sent to the write port 204. On a consistent manner, this NextReadAddress must be declared free again following the last read to the FIFO (i.e. written into the NextWriteAddress FIFO 336).

The DMA 200 targets can have different endianness type. An endianness module 324, is used to match the endianness of the source target and the destination target. The endianness conversion takes place if there's an endianness mismatch. This is done according to a source and destination endianness control bit-field (DMA4_CSDP.Src_Endianness=X) and (DMA4_CSDP.Dst_Endianness=Y). If X=Y then no endianess conversion is performed, however, if X/=Y then an endianness conversion is performed (big endian to little endian or little endian to big endian).

At the system level, more than one endianness module may have the capability to convert endianness if required. It is possible to inform the next module in the target of the read and write request paths to lock the endianness. This is qualified by an in-band signal (MreqEndiannessLock) when (DMA4_CSDP.Src_Endianness_lock) or (DMA4_CSDP.Dst_Endianness_lock) is set to 1. In any case, the DMA 200 generates an MReqDataType and MREqEndianness in-band qualifiers.

In the DMA4 address programming registers for the source target and the destination target, it is assumed that start addresses are always aligned on an element size boundary:

8-bit elements, start addresses aligned on bytes,

16-bit elements, start addresses aligned on 16-bit memory words, and

32-bit elements, start addresses aligned on 32-bit memory words.

Once this condition is met, there is still a potential alignment mismatch between source addresses and destination addresses (for example, when transferring a 16-bit data buffer from memory source start address 0x1000 to memory source destination address 0x10002 using a 32-bit DMA4 instance). Address alignment control 328 is required so that any source byte on any read port byte lane can be transferred on any write port byte lane.

It is often desirable to transfer irregular shape information, and it is especially common in software game programs. DMA 200 supports a COLOR KEY (defined in a per channel register named DMA4_COLOR) feature for 8 bpp, 16 bpp and 24 bpp from source to destination, ie. each element of the channel source is compared to a color key value, and those data_bits (pixels) that match the color key are not written to the destination. For 8 bpp, 16 bpp and 24 bpp the data-type specified in the DMA4_CSDP register are respectively 8-bit, 16-bit and 32-bit. During 32-bit (24 bpp) data transfer the data [31:24] is ‘0’. The color pattern is written at the following bit field of the DMA4_Color register:

[7:0] and don't care at [23:8] for 8 bpp

[15:0] and don't care at [23:16] for 16 bpp

[23:0] for 24 bpp

Burst/packed transactions can be used with no restriction. Each time there is a color key match, the write access is discarded using the write port byte enable pattern, but the write OCP transaction is performed normally. Thus, there is no performance penalty when this feature is enabled.

Solid Constant Color Fill:

This feature allows filling a region with a solid color or pattern, by repeating the data horizontally and vertically in the region. Since the solid color fill and the transparent copy functions are mutually exclusive in the same channel a “DMA4_COLOR” register is shared to set the constant color value, based on its data type. For 8 bpp, 16 bpp and 24 bpp, the data-type specified in a DMA4_CSDP register is respectively 8-bit, 16-bit and 32-bit. During the 32-bit (24 bpp) data transfer, the data [31:24] is “0”. The color pattern is written at the following bit field of the DMA4_Color register:

[7:0] and don't care at [23:8] for 8 bpp;

[15:0] and don't care at [23:16] for 16 bpp; and

[23:0] for 24 bpp.

The register data does not come from the read port 202; but is the source for solid fill data that goes out on the write port 204.

DMA circuit 200 can generate OCP bursts on both the read port 202 and the write port 204. The burst model complies with the OCPIP 2.0 with the following characteristics:

1). Incrementing, precise bursts. The burst size can be 16 bytes, 32 bytes or 64 bytes. For a 32-bit DMA4 instance, that means 4×32 or 8×32 bursts, 16×32-bit burst, for a 64-bit DMA4 instance that means 2×64 or 4×64 bursts or 8×64 bursts. Smaller burst size than the programmed burst size is also allowed. This is usually used when the start address is not aligned to the programmed burst size or the data remaining to be transferred is less than the programmed burst size. Better performance is achieved than by performing single transactions till the address is aligned for programmed burst size. Because of this, 2×32 burst is allowed on 32 bit OCP interface

2). Streaming burst (OCP code=STRM): It's valid if burst mode is enabled in constant addressing mode and non packed transaction. Also the packed target must be enabled when burst is enabled in non constant addressing mode.

3). End-of-burst qualifiers are required: MReqLast and SRespLast (also used for single OCP transactions).

4). All bursts are aligned: A burst is always starting on the memory address aligned on the burst size. This does not mean the OCP parameter burst_aligned should be ON, as this parameter assumes the byte enable pattern is all 1's and constant during the whole burst. This condition is not always met on the write port 204 operating in transparent-blit mode, as the byte enable pattern is used to eliminate pixels that must not be written into the memory (when there's a match with the color key). Even with the burst_enable option on, in the channel programming at the beginning of the transfer, DMA 200 can wait for the OCP address to reach a value aligned on the burst size, before issuing burst transactions. Therefore the first channel accesses can consist of single transactions.

Whatever the transfer length, DMA 200 never generates non-completed bursts. At the end of a channel transfer, if there is not enough data (to be read or written) for filling a full burst, single transactions are issued on the OCP interfaces.

If burst is enabled and hardware DMA request synchronization is enabled and address is not aligned on burst boundary, then DMA 200 will automatically split this burst access into multiple smaller accesses (minimum number of aligned accesses) until address is aligned on the Burst boundary. If last transfer is not burst aligned, then the remaining data are split into minimum aligned smaller access.

Referring to FIG. 4, there is shown a diagram highlighting a read port 202 multi-threading scenario were the read port has four threads (ThreadID0, ThreadID1, ThreadID2 and ThreadID3) 402-408 in accordance with an embodiment of the invention. The current status for each of the threads (0-3) is shown in time lines 410-416 respectively. With the read requests (OCP_Read_Request) and read responses (OCP_Read_Responses) highlighted on time lines 418 and 420 respectively. As shown in 422, it takes one or two cycles to switch from a first logical channel (LCH(i)) to another logical channel (LCH(j)).

Referring to FIG. 5, there is shown a diagram highlighting a write port 204 multi-threading scenario in accordance with an embodiment of the invention. Each time there is an OCP write request (OCP_Write_Request); one thread n (0 up to 1) is allocated during the current write transaction. In FIG. 5, two threads, Thread0 and Thread1 are shown. While there is a free thread, other channels can be scheduled according to the arbitration schema employed in the particular design. One thread becomes free as soon as the corresponding channel write transaction (e.g., single transaction, burst transaction of 4×32 or 8×32) is finished. Once a thread becomes free, it can be allocated to another channel. FIG. 5 shows four logical channels LCH(i) 502, LCH(j) 504, LCH(k) 506 and LCH(l) 508, the current status of the two threads (Thread0 and Thread1) is also shown. As also shown, it takes one or two cycles from the end of a write request to start a new write request.

Referring now to FIG. 6, there is shown a functional diagram of the read port scheduler 302. Hardware 602 and software enabled channel requests 604 are received into the scheduler and go through a first level of arbitration in block 606. In block 605, the channel requests are split into high priority and low (regular) priority channels. The logic for determining what characterizes a high priority and low priority channels are dependent on the system design requirements. The high priority channels go to arbitration logic 606 were arbitration between concurrent channel requests occurs. For example, depending on the arbitration rules, Chi may have priority over Chj when i<j. The low priority channels go through the low priority channel arbitration logic 612,

High and low priority channel scheduling and rescheduling for the high priority channels occurs in 610, while the low priority channel scheduling and rescheduling occurs in 612. Another arbitration between the high and low priority channels occurs in 614 according to the weight (W) given to the high priority channels provided via block 616. The available read threads 618 are allocated and provided to the read service request 620. In FIG. 7, there is shown a write port scheduler block diagram similar to the read port scheduler shown in FIG. 6.

While the preferred embodiments of the invention have been illustrated and described, it will be clear that the invention is not so limited. Numerous modifications, changes, variations, substitutions and equivalents will occur to those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention as defined by the appended claims.